- 10/02/2018
- Dr. Srivatsan Gurumurthy
- 0 Comments
- Uncategorized
GutSpeak 2: The case of the annoying Achalasia
Mrs. S 30 year old female presented with complaints of difficulty in swallowing, chest pain, regurgitation of food and weight loss over the last 3 months. She was investigated for the above symptoms, underwent an Upper GI endoscopy and Barium Swallow study, was diagnosed with an ailment called “Achalasia Cardia” and was advised to undergo a Manometry test. Surprised by the diagnosis, she had a few questions to ask her gastroenterologist and here is the text of the same.
What exactly does this term Achalasia mean?
The term Achalasia actually means failure to relax. In this condition the Esophageal muscle lacks the ability to move food into the stomach. It is a motility disorder of the food pipe where the LES (a ring of muscle fibres present at the junction between esophagus and stomach) fails to relax or open in response to food in the esophagus. This causes difficulty in swallowing, regurgitation of food and chest pain. In this condition there is an incomplete LES relaxation, increased LES tone, and lack of peristalsis of the esophagus (inability of smooth muscle to move food down the esophagus).